4.7 Article

Mangrove growth response to experimental warming is greatest near the range limit in northeast Florida

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 102, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3320

Keywords

Avicennia germinans; latitudinal gradient; mangrove growth; passive warming; relative growth rate; shrub; Spartina alterniflora

Categories

Funding

  1. NSF DEB [1655659]
  2. Division Of Environmental Biology
  3. Direct For Biological Sciences [1655659] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study conducted warming experiments at three coastal wetland sites in northeast Florida, showing that warming promoted the growth rate of mangroves in height but did not affect canopy area growth. Site differences in growth rate were pronounced, with the northern site exhibiting lower growth rates and a wider growth pattern.
Shrubs are invading into grasslands around the world, but we don't yet know how these shrubs will fare in a warmer future. In ecotonal coastal wetland ecosystems, woody mangroves are encroaching into herbaceous salt marshes owing to changes in temperature, precipitation, and sediment dynamics. Increasing mangrove biomass in wetlands often increases carbon storage, which is high in these productive ecosystems, but little is known about how mangrove growth will change in response to warming. To address this knowledge gap, we deployed warming experiments at three coastal wetland sites along a latitudinal gradient in northeast Florida where Avicennia germinans, black mangroves, are encroaching into salt marshes. We achieved air temperature warming (+1.6 degrees C during the day) at all three sites and measured stem elongation, canopy height and area changes, and leaf and node number. After 2 yr of warming, we found that mangrove growth rate in height increased due to warming. Warming increased stem elongation by 130% over unwarmed control plots after 1 yr at the northern site. Mangrove growth in canopy area did not respond to warming. Site differences in growth rate were pronounced, and mangrove growth in both height and area were lowest at the northern site, despite greater impacts of warming at that site. We also found that area-based relative growth rate was five times higher across all treatments than height-based relative growth rate, indicating that mangroves are growing wider rather than taller in these ecotonal environments. Our findings indicate that the growth effect of experimental warming depends on site characteristics and growth parameter measured. We also propose that differential mangrove growth across the three sites may be driven by biotic factors such as the identity of the salt marsh species into which mangroves are encroaching. Our results suggest that, as seen in other ecosystems, wetland plants may respond most strongly to warming at their poleward range edge.

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